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A year ago today, in pictures: Coronavirus outbreak and more moments you may remember
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Last modified on Wed 17 Mar 2021 16.23 EDT
Supporters of the jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny face the prospect of indefinite house arrest, in what campaigners say is an attempt by the Kremlin to âshut downâ anti-government protests.
Ten prominent activists have been under house arrest for the past two months, including two members of Pussy Riot, Masha Alekhina and Lucy Shtein, as well as Navalnyâs brother Oleg, and Lyubov Sobol
, a lawyer with the opposition leaderâs Anti-Corruption Foundation.
They are accused of violating coronavirus restrictions by calling on Russians to take to the streets. More than 10,000 people were arrested in January, during pro-Navalny rallies that took place in 180 towns and cities across Russia. The protests were the biggest for a decade.
Russian protest group Pussy Riot sells NFTs for latest single Panic Attack The Russian protest group Pussy Riot is auctioning four non-fungible tokens tied to a new single in order to support a shelter for victims of domestic violence. 10105 Total views News
Russian punk feminist group Pussy Riot has released a new music video and is auctioning a series of four, non-fungible-tokens to accompany its release and raise funds for their art projects and local activism.
The group first rose to prominence in 2012 after staging a guerilla performance of an iconoclastic feminist punk song in Moscow s Christ the Saviour Cathedral in protest against the Orthodox Church s complicity with Vladimir Putin s regime. Shortly after, the group s members were arrested for hooliganism motivated by religious hatred and later sentenced to two years in a penal colony.
What Russia was like in 1931 (PHOTOS) Archive photo What this year meant for Russian history, what people looked like and what was happening on the cities’ streets.
Year 1931. Stalin s reign was gaining strength. Soviet power was amidst its ‘Five Year Plan’ of a planned economy. Industrialization and construction works were being forced. The country was finally reviving its economy after the chaos of World War I and the Civil War, however, people’s lives were at constant risk, due to harsh state policies.
Agriculture was being forced to operate under state control. Peasants were deprived of private property and “surpluses” of grain and cattle were confiscated. People were forced to join the kolkhoz, the Soviet form of collective farm that, by 1931, appeared in most villages of the countries. ‘Kulaks’, the “rich” peasants, and those who used hired labor on their farms, were resettled in Siberia or sent to Gulags.
Священномученик Петр Скипетров – аналитический портал ПОЛИТ РУ
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